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tv   After the Bell  FOX Business  June 4, 2014 4:00pm-5:01pm EDT

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the biggest move we have seen since december, so great news there. >> i'm bullish on this. we have a lot of stuff right here, but let's first look at the markets. they ended in the green. a victory by a nose so to speak as we head into belmont for this weekend. that the tickler stops and that we will delve deeper into and how well they did. yard he mentioned apple and other stocks hitting new highs and i believe it's another record for the s&p, i believe we are very close it's not already. been a busy hour for you. stay where you are. after the bell starts right now. david: i just want to put aside that it is a new s&p record. cheryl: confirmed. market looking good today and let's break down on the
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action and our new record as david just said. with two names to add your portfolio. harris financial group managing director who will tell us the biggest risks to the market this year and we also have todd three talk to my do is argue. is this a shadow economy? frankly, you had bad housing data, jobs data was crummy this morning, gdp isn't going anywhere, but yet we have new records today. >> it's déjà vu all over again. we have new highs for what reason i can't tell you. we are like on fantasy island here. we are really waiting for mario dragging tomorrow i think that's what the numbers are showing here. we have seen new highs and i think we are waiting to hear what he will do with the ecb tomorrow morning. you can see the whole action the last six or seven days it has been a melt up i'm a very quiet s&p and ranges six, seven-point today which
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is really nothing for the s&p. volatility a multiyear lows. i think everyone is pointing to tomorrow first and then friday's job number, but as i said it's date déjà vu are over again. david: despite the fact every day we keep going up i can tell you how many guys i have had on that say they will pull back, but they don't come when. you come closer to a specific timeframe of a pullback than anyone i have ever talked with. at least in your notes you do. where do you say about that timing and the poll that? >> i agree with todd. i think there are concerns even though we are drifting higher up to the 52 week high, again a little volume and not a lot of participation. june july august is a three-month time period that has historically been the worst time period. summer has historically been true and you compiler with the fact the underneath the surface there's a lot of weakness, the leadership has
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come from the defensive sector, healthcare, utilities, i think perhaps we could be in for a bit of rough waters in the summer over the next few months potentially a nice buying opportunity after that. cheryl: jamie, you are concerned about inflation. you say inflation could be the biggest headwind for the market, but we aren't seen in place right now, so where is a come from? >> we aren't seen inflation the headline numbers, but we see to the data coming out, the trading numbers, you are seen a lot of it in production productivity and you start to see inflation start to really really rear its ugly head and one of the things that makes it tough is when the bond market starts to reverse and the interest rates go up it will be hard for stocks to continue to go up if interest rates climb. i know we are sitting at lowe's on interest rates , but that can reverse quickly and when it does that inflation story will make stocks difficult to own in the next year or so. david: todd horwitz be very careful about what you put down on paper because i am
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about to read what you put down on paper for us this morning. you say and i'm quoting you right now, the big money will hold the market up here until they can squeeze every drop out of the retail trader. now, do you really think that there is a game plan of the big traders to lower in the retail sector so that they can get out? >> i do believe that it's as always has happened in history that you let the retailers come in and like a boxer they keep up here and it is artificially floated by the fed anyway and people are saying it's finally safe i can get in and what has happened every single time when the bubble pops and the music stops there's no place for the retail trader to sit and go what happened to my money was again and that's how i see it. i think the market is easily manipulated by the federal reserve as they propped it up for the last five years.
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david: where is this smoke-filled room where all of the big money gets together and plans at this strategy? where is it? chicago, new york, la? >> probably in my mind, but i do think you see the way the tape action goes. it's evident there something going on beneath the scenes and i think that is very much realistic to what i said in a do believe the big money is holding the market higher. david: i'm teasing you, by the way. cheryl: i'm glad todd agrees with me on the fact that it's a fed field market. jamie, besides the fact of inflation you still see the s&p up and going up another five to 6% for the year. even through the summer months it seems like we will have kind of a tight trading range. where that come from? >> first of all what you said disagree about retail. i work with retail investors and they are not jumping in with both feet. they are mostly diversified and they are not the type of people who are being led to the slaughter, so let's not take retail investors,
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regular people and throw them out. cheryl: can i ask you though , what are they saying to you? where they nervous about getting into the market? >> they aren't there is about being in the market. they're comfortable with the market, they just don't own 100% stock a 100% don's, they are diversified and understand what they own . i think it's difficult to say that the retail investor is being led into the slaughter come i don't believe that. there's a lot of people out there that might do it, but the overwhelming majority don't see when the high-frequency trading and other issues, but i know david has more questions. david: i wanted to hear todd's response, but i want to go to one joseph picks, both of your picks joe are in the construction oil business and that assumes to me you believe will will be going a lot faster and be having a balance back from the winter doldrums. >> yeah, i like the energy sector when you look at it, price action has been incredible a strong and the thing i really like about
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the two pics as we just sort of exited the earnings season the expectations were these stocks are incredibly low and we saw pretty good reports that beat those expectations. strong price action and despite that price action clearing their 2008 hi we continue to see skepticism and i think that combination is bullish and could bode well. cheryl: we are looking at a comic of the lips right now it seems to me with the energy boom that is happening in this country that the place you want to go. i want to bring you in jamie and i know you have a couple pics and want to get that to the viewers pretty quick before we let you go. who do you like right now? >> i really like that, there are 26 million and the people that are currently afflicted by diabetes and 70 million that are prediabetic in 100 million people, a third of the country has potentially some interesting diabetes in this company decks common has this monitoring system, probably the number one thing that has happened in
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diabetes management in the last 40 years and for the first time people can actually manage their diabetes because if they don't there is all kinds of healthcare cost to come as a result. so this newly fda approved device i think it's a huge hit in a huge win and i think it's a company you need to pay attention to. cheryl: people are still going to drink their coax it either cookies even if the obama administration told them not to. >> that's right, but they can monitor their diabetes cheryl: jimmy cox, joe bell, thank you. we will see you in a few moments. david had more questions for you, todd. david: he's a big believer i just have to push back a bit. meanwhile, it's the pot calling the kettle black. they are lashing out us tech firms for allegedly stealing secrets. they are lashing out at us? they have been doing it for years and in fact we have someone who says almost everyone-- fortune 500 company has been a victim. we will be asking him what
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chinese hackers are taking and how companies can fight back. cheryl: plus, she's a real estate mogul with nine luxury properties in her portfolio. big expansion plans on the way and we are talking exclusively with of anna trump about the lecture illustrate market, her new projects and why now the now is the best time. david: the range is the kings think ice tonight for the first game of the stanley cup finals. not just bragging rights at stake, millions possibly hundreds of millions are on the line as well and we could tell you who will win big-time. cheryl: we will be talking with an exercise brighter as he prepares for the belmar. do you think california cromwell take the triple crown title? tweet as it at the end atb. [ male announcer ] what if a small company
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david: the third a restaurant company bob evans is made be the latest player in the poultry were for hillshire brands. cheryl: nicole peder lady is on the floor the new york stock exchange. reporter: we know very well cheryl and david, there has been a food battle in this business and we have had pilgrim's pride and tyson foods battling it out for hillshire.
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hillshire well-known for jimmy dean sausages and ballpark franks is all about packaged it good and the like and going through your grocery aisle and who hasn't been spoken up? that is bob evans farms, but you have hedge farmed and is it and this is their activist for this firm and basically saying listen you guys got to get in the game because now you may be in the takeover target business. two separate businesses or they would like them to separate, but two types of businesses i should say, restaurants and packaged foods. package food accounts word about 23% of revenue in 2013 and you have activist saying he bob evans, maybe we can make something of it. stock is up higher. david: everyone wants a piece of hillshire. local, thank you very much. cheryl: breakfast is the best meal of the day. let's head back to todd horwitz. >> everyone will be watching that announcement tomorrow
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and see if he is a big enough gun to make it exciting, but if he's talking about rates i think the sparks will be in for a beat down. the whole market has built itself up waiting to see what he's going to say. i think the jobs number is secondary to what he says tomorrow and to david's question i think retail investors always get tortured when markets collapse and bubbles pop. david: question i have for you, todd, i'm going to go to europe and paris on saturday should i buy my euros tomorrow or on friday? >> i thank you should buy them on friday because i think that they might be cheaper on friday. david: okay. cheryl: good practical advice. todd, thank you. david: china is targeting us tech companies. chinese media is set demeaning severe punishment for us firms like google and apple for allegedly stealing china's secrets. can you imagine? china has been spying a lot and stealing a lot from your company's for years.
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cheryl: i was every four to 1000 company has been hacked, many without knowing it. candies big copies protect themselves? let's bring in crowd strikes cofounder and ceo three george, these companies, our companies are being attacked and you say that at this point the us government is the one that is winning and the us companies are losing. is the government only protecting itself in all of this? >> welcome i think that is what most people don't understand. the us government is really focused on protecting its own infrastructure, whether it's military or other agencies. unfortunately, there is no agency in charge of protecting the.com. and we have seen a dramatic increase in the appetite for intellectual property by the likes of countries, china in particular, and being aggressive and stealing america's intellectual property. david: let me just focus in on that. do you think the government could be doing more to help us cubbies?
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they are certainly screaming about it all the time, the obama ministration, but could they actually being doing more on their own to help us comedies? >> a couple weeks ago the government charged five pla officers with hacking current. now, we will never see those folks in the us, but it was a symbolic gesture focusing on china and really putting a spotlight on the voracious appetite they have for intellectual property. i think that was a move in the right direction although symbolic end surely from a government perspective we would love to see more information sharing with of the private sector specific to some of the actors that are out there. cheryl: that's my question here is that we have been doing-- us companies have been trying to infiltrate the chinese market and they have done deal with chinese companies treat are the chinese companies themselves the enemy or-- or they just as guilty of the chinese government in stealing our intellectual property or do you think the actual private sector in china is a friend
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to the us? >> well, it's interesting because in china as you know most of the companies have ownership associated with the government, so it's difficult to separate these out and when the government goes out and went it explores for data that it's looking for an intellectual property is easy to pass along to one of the companies it owns. literally, it can cut years of a development cycle and sometimes worth millions of dollars in research and development exercise. cheryl: that is so scary, what does that mean for us companies themselves to forge these relationships and now they are getting hit by not just the chinese government, but also they can't trust the people they are blue-- doing business with in china. >> it's been a difficult landscape to do business there anyway, so i think most company's who do business in china at some point have some level of intrusion just out of the china office and then on top of it you have to deal with the chinese government and it becomes a real maze to
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actually get through. this response is not a surprise. these are bully tactics from china responded to the us calling them out for many years we realize that this passive stance of not putting them on the spotlight wasn't working and this is the response. david: let's talk about one area in particular that the chinese are interested in in dating are private property for and that's the energy field. we had wilbur ross on a couple weeks ago and he used to be very much interested in doing fracking, bringing fracking research over to china and less so now. i wondered if that is because that the chinese has been stealing so much of our intellectual property on fracking research that they don't need us companies to come in and do it for them. >> i absolutely think that is the case. we have spent a lot of time focused on the energy sector in working with cubbies and there are three key areas try and is interested in, deepwater exploration, which includes three and 40
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seismic technology to find oil reserves and it includes the ability to actually clean the stuff up once they make a mess. a couple years ago there was a big mess and they didn't have technology, so part of their mandate as a country is to become energy independent. where do we think they're going to get that technology? from the us. cheryl: and they have been stealing our intellect show property for years and will keep doing it. george, thank you very much. david: good discussion. meanwhile, the stanley cup finals kickoff tonight in los angeles. raiders and the kings go head-to-head for the first time in the nhl finals. how lucrative are these games? who stands to profit the most? they haven't faced each other in professional spots the matter what sported about 30 years and we will talk about that next. cheryl: the coast-to-coast war and of anna trump is doubling down. on the luxury hotel market and looking overseas. she told me to tell you hello.
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where is the trumpet family headed right now? we will talk to her and that they foxbusiness exclusive coming up. david: after 50 years the nfl is making a big change to the super bowl. what is it? we will tell you coming up. cheryl: cheaper tickets? ♪ ♪ ♪ [ girl ] my mom, she makes underwater fans that are powered by the moon. ♪ she can print amazing things, right from her computer. [ whirring ] [ train while blows ] she makes trains that are friends with trees. ♪ my mom works at ge. ♪
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to offer a credit card through the new mask i will have a microchip make it more difficult to duplicate and those with only a magnetic strip. frozen raises the third hive is grossing movie ever in japan. the walt disney movie hit $212 million in box office sales trailing only titanic. it was cute. i wash it. ford chose up its lightweight concept. the fusion sedan prototype is made of aluminum and 800 pounds lighter. king digital entertainment unveiling its new game in public. releasing bubble with saga to. that, david, is your speed read. david: most guys and women know that the first time in decades the hottest advertising markets in the world, new york and la will be facing off in the finals
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of a major professional sporting events read the new york rangers and the la kings are about to turn the game of ice hockey at least temporarily into the richest sports advertising market areas, so how will the usually more subdued national hockey league milk all this attention and make it last? we put it to the best sports is this analyst in the country, nate in the world warms the magazine mike who we called in the wizard of oz. of, good to see you. have the rangers and kings ever squared off in the finals? >> never. this is the first time they ever have done in the kings were in the finals went gretzky was they are back in 93 and the rangers last won the cup 1994. david: who can forget gretzky being hated by all canadians after he made the switch to la. this was actually the first time a sports franchise in la has faced off with a
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sports franchise in new york the matter what sports since early in the 80s. >> that's right, yankees and dodgers you have to go back to and in the hl your loving this. you have the two biggest media market and you also have nbc, which has shown every game live during the course. david: they really lucked out. >> streaming live in the viewership numbers because the games have been so break -- great have local records. david: box, we should mention, fox sports just find the kings, so we give his of the the action also. >> two years ago, right around that time it was very poor to it is on fox's part because they realize the kings weren't just a one-shot team and were here for a while and they are getting paid back now. david: it's not just the evil nbc, by the way fox took a piece also. how does the nhl milk this? can they turn this into something that will last and not just be a flash in the pan? >> it's right for the two
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teams right off the bat. at this point you have been raising ticket prices in your talk about each game bringing about a million and have toddlers to the bottom line because you have ari paid the players. as far as the league goes what you're really saying because you and i both know is that chicago and hot-- boston -- with this does for the league's same we are coast-to-coast and for big brands to sponsor the nhl like bridgestone, ea sports look, we now cover the entire us which is great for the league. david: the market share of hockey in general is growing. >> right. you go back to what you are saying about gretzky, without him going to the kings back them i don't think this would have ever happened because you would have an expansion team in anaheim ducks coming later. david: you think this will bring new fans into the sport of hockey? >> i think it will add new fans and also help make the existing kings very strong. david: here's the one argument against that, which
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is the reason why football and baseball are so popular is because every kid plays it. not every kid plays ice hockey. you have to be in an area where conditions are favorable to ice. >> no question in the teens in florida, nashville are still having financial problems. one of the things the nhl has that the other leagues dell is the great influx of players they get from outside the us that are tremendous numbers of european players in the league right now and this helps the team's visibility outside the us. david: i know you are not a big horse racing fan, on the other hand you cover all sports. on saturday we may have a triple crown winner and it would be the first time in dozens of years. first of all it's california crown and i should mention a plug for later on in the show we will show and talking to one of the writers of california crown who could win the belmont stakes this saturday. three-five odds for the score very what is that mean? >> it means you have to bet
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a lot of money and you will get much back. my heart is with california chrome and it would be the first crown winner says the firm. belmont stakes seems to prove that a lot of longshots win, so my money would be in a longshot. david: always a pleasure. it ain't for nothing. cheryl: i'm going with x-acto betting. curly and chrome is where i'm going. as the cost of college keeps rising families are looking for ways to keep their expenses down and we will talk to the company that's looking to help investors make money by helping students say there's. and the trumpet family isn't known for sitting on the sidelines, the height of the recession the company double down on its real estate investment and now the tribes are at it again and this time in the luxury hotel market and we will talk exclusively with ivana trump and white now it's
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time for luxury real estate and if you're looking to invest in small. it smaller lesser-known cousin could be the better back. we will be back.
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david: if you like small stocks you might invest in russell 2000, but the big name index is actually number two when it comes to small returns. the 30-year old russell 2000
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trails it's a younger rival, the s&p small-cap 600 index, remember that name since its launch the s&p 600 has actually be the russell 2000 and 12 of 19 years. currently the s&p 600 has high returns over the last five, three and one year period through the end of may. so, that's the market. cheryl: very educational. in the real estate market and when it began to fall apart in 2008, the trump organization decided to double down on real estate. the company spent $30 million renovating that trump international hotel in manhattan plus opening of the new trump in soho with hotels in chicago and las vegas to follow i asked trump organization executive vice president ivanka trump who led these projects with her father why the family made these big bets. it's a fox business exclusive. >> you want to be a contrary in, so when the market is down that's a great time to
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be acquiring and we were sitting on a lot of cash and we have been conservative during sort of the height of the boom years. my father didn't like to bid against sovereign sons for the same property on fifth avenue. the economics were no longer making sense to us, so we became very conservative in the mid- late 2000's, which allowed us to be aggressive of the past couple years and it has been amazing, so we are repositioning that and we acquired the old post office building in washington dc, which is undergoing a massive renovation and we are starting construction expert. we just got iconic golf resort in london. we will review the golf resort. cheryl: since you brought up call, you have been-- you and your father have both been aggressive in the golf industry. is that we see the next
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level of growth in hotels and properties overall? >> we have an amazing golf portfolio, some with resorts attached. we rebuilt the iconic blue monster to just unbelievable accolades and reviews. other where it's a standalone golf experience, but it allows us to look at opportunities on a global basis that are mixed use in nature and adding incredible value to the golf experience, so we actually came back from dubai where we are launching an unbelievable golf course, trump international golf course. so, we plan to have a championship course and it will be absolutely phenomenal and there will be 120 luxury estates as well as part of that development. cheryl: one of the things you were doing and have done in the past, but many of the bigger chains, marriott for example they are trying to get out of the business of owning property. you are not doing it.
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you on miami, ireland, vegas, chicago you all knows full and you manage those in full. >> we manage and we all -- we-- truthfully it so good for a business because other developers around the world -- how do you tell someone you are going with a life strategy and then tell them you want to manage their property? if you don't believe in owning real estate how can you effectively manage their properties? so, believe there's a natural alignment of interest there. there is an understanding. we speak the same language of our development parties all over the world. we love real estate and add value by the fact that we have these capabilities. when we are looking to buy a hotel and another person is looking to buy a hotel they are thinking and underwriting how much they have to pay a third-party operator where we are taking the money we would have paid for a third-party operator and reinvesting it.
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he went overseas growth. we talked about dubai and ireland, but where in your mind if you look around the world right now is there a place you are not in that you want to be right now? >> we are very focused on asia. we open an office in shanghai and have many opportunities circulating, so we will-- we will make exciting announcement in china since your area and we have projects underway in the philippines and elsewhere in asia and on the hospitality site specifically and we are excited about the opportunity china affords us in south america is a market where we are busy in. we have trump brio underdevelopment and trump panama has open. we are achieving record numbers, so there is a lot of global opportunities right now. cheryl: she-- they are all about china. they are all about expansion in china because that-- all the hotels chains are going
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after that middle-class chinese customer and that is where they see the money. david: they are not leaving out the middle east. they are still doing to buy-- cheryl: he finally got his dubai deal done. they finally got it signed. david: you have a huge family conference coming up. cheryl: yes. david: more with the trance and cheryl coming up. two and a half men star ashton kercher is a big investor in all things student education and the company ceo will tell us about his brand-new acquisition and his goal of reaching 30 million students. this is a first on fox business interview coming up. cheryl: it's going to be a race for the ages. california chrome preparing for saturday's belmont stakes and we will handicap odds of a historical triple found-- crown victory. it hasn't happened since 1978. the exercise trainer will be here.
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david: tell us what you think. where are you betting? will california chrome when the triple crown? ♪ ♪
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using numbers and set of roman numeral's. the nfl has been using roman numeral's to market the big event since super bowl five in 1971, the changeover will not be permanent. the league says it's a one-year break. i'm hoping they just leave it in numbers. david: as college costs rise and students fall further in debt want company is trying to capitalize on the hunt for bargains in higher education. the education services company has just been $30 million to buy tutoring service and hopes to tap into a 60 billion-dollar industry. has a doing? cheryl: joining us now on our first on fox interview that president. dan, tutoring, who knew? tell me, isn't that bad out there for kids? >> well, i can tell you if you asked my family is more
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a failure for the education system than me being a marketing genius. less than 50% of college kids graduate. less than 50% of community college kids get a degree of any kind. students are working harder and harder and harder and it's taking longer to graduate and the job market is changing. something like instant edu allows for them at any time to get real-time on-demand video, or textbased tutoring if any subject anywhere in the world and it is tailor-made for the internet. 3:00 a.m. in the morning and you are struggling with the subject you can: line come as you tutor pick the one you want and with 40 cents a minute you can get help. david: so many college graduates, not just people-- some college graduates are without work right now, moving back home how does that play into your entire business model? does it help or hurt? >> it hurts because i'm an american and that is not what i want and i'm also a father of rachel and samantha one and soon to be 19 and i prefer the not move
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back home. david: i have 21-year old as well. >> we just launched also the first national career site. less than 50% of all college students actually visit the career center on their campus in less than 2% ask a good job at it, so now, we built a site where students can come on and ask questions like what is it mean to be a graphic designer and how much that he was the job description? david: you have gone far beyond textbooks. >> far beyond textbooks it's just one of eight services we offer. we love offering it because it saved students yearly have billion dollars last year. it's money that can go back into their pocket in the family's pocket to read this help save time and money and help them get smarter and everything we offer is designed to be student first. cheryl: you had a long and historic career at yahoo-- >> c00. cheryl: excuse me yes see 00. what do you take from that experience and bring it to that-- the sixth venture?
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>> one of the reasons i did this is because my older daughter rachel was a junior in high school and has went to process and it was difficult and complicated and very confusing just like it was when we went to college. you couldn't figure out where to go, what to do and where to start in my experience at yahoo taught me that what the internet really does is eliminates that imports of geography, time of day and physical structure. so, we thought we had opportunity to use the internet to help students make better choices and get better outcomes and pick a better college, match the scholarships, pick a better class. cheryl: is it all online? what's going to happen to the college is? >> a lot of the campuses will remain because there are other benefits to go and learn and socialize. i'm still an enormous advocate of that. students today are not getting the full and complete education a need to get jobs and that's why there is 19% employment.
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we can work with college campus and expand the curriculum because only 9% of the students time is in the classroom. the rest of the time they could be doing skills -based training. david: we just put an ugly graph up. have been good cop and now cyber bad cop. the stock is down 30% since its ipo. why has it been such a tough sell for investors? >> it's been complicated for me as a ceo i can't focus on the stock price. i'm focusing on long creation of value. some things you learn when you run public computers it's a complicated story that is? name: transition, so people wonder textbooks, print textbooks how long will they be around? but when we took the job . >> it's a little like publishing in general, no one knows. >> that's right. and we knew that coming into the company we decided to diversify the company. it was zero in revenue three years ago and we are now approaching 100 million. i think the confusion over
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the textbook business in the new businesses and when did the transition get complete and will this keep executing every day on saving students money and it will work out. cheryl: you can bring in advertising money, right? you have jobs, internships, scholarships, this will be more of a hub for kids? >> it is a student hub. exactly right. brand advertising is blocking to us because our reach between high school students and college students is now 13 million students and we know where you live, where you are in school, what you are studying. david: that's scary. >> it's a little bit scary. david: you know almost as much is that an sw does. >> we are staying away from privacy issues. the most important thing is that the internet can allow you to be relevant as a student. david: still a work it in progress. great to see you again. cheryl: well, i have crowned fever. will california chrome--
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david: you are going to be there. cheryl: i wish it was tomorrow. the history books, we are going live to belmont park. david: is california chrome going to win? forget about traditional -- the 3d printing revolution has led to a potential breakthrough in medical technology and treatment for broken bones. we will tell you how that works coming up. ♪ ♪ does your mouth often feel dry? a dry moutcan be a side effect of many medications but it can also lead to tooth decay and bad breath. that's why there's biotene. available as an oral rinse, toothpaste, spray or gel, biotene can provide soothing relief, and it helps keep your mouth healthy, too. remember, while your medication is doing you good, a dry mouth isn't. biotene -- for people who suffer from dry mouth.
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cheryl: a young thoroughbred named california chrome could win a historic triple crown at belmont park on saturday. post positions were drawn today. david: fox news jonathan hunt took to the track three the exercise writer and asked him about that duo's special traded jonathan. reporter: david and cheryl, there is no one who knows california chrome better than willie dell got out. as exercise writer he rides california chrome every single day and he is clearly very proud and excited to be preparing a horse for his tilt it history. here's willie. >> he could be walking along and he will hear the camera
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and he feels that this moment and you feel intense up. >> he poses? >> yes. i calling chrome dome, but now i call him though. strike a pose. [laughter] reporter: what does it mean for you to be involved in a horse like this? >> it's strength in training and it's hard to even explain the emotions. i have only compared it to my daughter being boring and that's when we won the derby. if we win the triple crown it will be hard to explain. i will probably break down and cry and fall to my knees for back do you think it will happen? >> yes. this is the strongest i have felt about him winning. any other ways i would say he's going to run good, but i definitely think he will win. reporter: there you have it. it's not directly from the horses mouth, but as close as you can get. california chrome to make
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history on saturday becoming the first horse to win the triple crown since 1978. you heard it right here, david and cheryl. cheryl: thank you so much. david: unlike the several-- other triple crown winners this is a real american story. cheryl: right. david: this was a horse i was never expected to run is professionally and well as it has. mean while, the secret service try to get more personal and looking to buy software to put detector mood on social media. this is scary stuff. the. cheryl: it's a groundbreaking innovation. this may be able to heal your injuries in record time. all of this when we return. i ys say be thman with the plan
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but with less ergy, moodiness, i had to do something. i saw mdoctor. a blood test showed it was low stosterone, not age. we talked about axiron the onlynderarm low t treaent that can restore t vels to normal in about two weeks in most men. axiron is not for use in women or anyone younger than 18 or men with prostate or breast cancer. women, especlly those who are or who may become pregnant, and children should avoidt where axirons applied as unexpected signs of puberty in children or changes in body hair or incased acne in women may occur. report these symptoms to your doctor. tell your doctorbout all medical conditions and medications. serious side effects could include increased sk of prostate cancer, worsening prostate symptoms, decreased sperm count, ankle,f, enlarged or painful breasts, problems breathing while sleeping and blood clots in the legs. common side effects include skin redness or irritation where applied, increased red blood cell count, common side effects include skin redness headache, diarrhea, vomiting, and increase in psa. ask your doctor about axiron.
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...i got lots of advice, but i needed information i could trust. unitedhealthcare's innovative, simple program helps moms stay on track with their doctors to get the right care and guidance. (anncr vo) that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. david: time to go "off the desk." really cool stuff here. this is how you normally heal a broken bone or sprained wrist but what if i told you there is even faster way to mend aareally
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serious injury like this involving 3d printing? a turkish designer, invent ad 3d printed cast that heals bones up to 40% faster than a normal cast. that is the claim anyway. the device is equipped with low intensity ultrasound system that helps create new bone or is supposed to. sleek bleak design, looks like something out of "x-men" and eliminates itchiig or smells. i still remember that awful smell. >> also "off the desk," light detection software is so last millennium. the secret service is looking to buy a new generation of software that can detect sarcasm across multiple media platforms. the secret service is interested what people say on twitter. it is hope to stop false-positives to the threats to the president and nation. david: the secret service is testing our sarcasm now? we asked you on facebook or twitter if you think california chrome will take the triple
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crown. joe on twitter says, yes, we need a triple crown winner. >> "willis report is coming up. gerri, sam's club, near credit card. you will look what that all gerri: we have somebody from the company, from sam's club to talk to us about a new product. also on the show the white house looks to the private sector for a new va chief. we'll examine the leading contender to see if he can fix a broken va. congress investigates the student loan crisis, record college debt but what is going to fix that problem. we investigate the pros and cons of long-term care insurance. will it help you stay in your own home instead of going to a nursing home. your coverage under obamacare may be in jeopardy tonight if you have it. the department of health and human services says more than 2 million people, that's lot of them, 2.1 million people who signed up, they have errors in their applications. for some folks, that means they will have to pay more. for others,

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